4.3 Article

Rebuilding the fortress? Europe in a changing world economy

Journal

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2023.2211281

Keywords

European Union; globalization; international political economy; state capitalism; industrial strategy; trade

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Two competing visions, "Atlantic Europe" and "Fortress Europe", shaped Europe's position in the world economy in the post-war era. While the "Fortress Europe" view was thought to have been defeated during globalization, concepts such as economic sovereignty and strategic autonomy have reemerged in the EU. A selective fortification of European industrial strategy and trade policy is occurring, aimed at protecting European firms from new global competition patterns.
Two rival visions of Europe's place in the world economy competed for primacy throughout the post-war era. The idea of an 'Atlantic Europe' promoted close economic ties to the United States and integration into the liberal international order. An alternative 'Fortress Europe' vision aimed to carve out a sphere of relative European autonomy backed by trade barriers and industrial protectionism. While many argued that the 'Fortress Europe' vision was defeated during the globalization of the 1990s and 2000s, concepts such as economic sovereignty, industrial strategy and 'strategic autonomy' have returned to EU circles. Is a rebuilding of 'Fortress Europe' taking place in this context? This paper argues that the old tension between 'Atlantic' and 'Fortress' Europe is re-emerging but in a new form and under a new set of international conditions. A 'selective fortification' of European industrial strategy and trade policy is taking shape, as EU policymakers develop targeted instruments and institutional capacities that aim to insulate European firms from new patterns of international competition. The selective refortification of European capitalism has implications for debates within international political economy (IPE) on the future of liberal international order, new patterns of competitive regionalization, and the restructuring of the relation between the state and global capitalism.

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